“I will carry on ...”
This may be a single off of the soon-to-be-released EP, "Strange Days", but
it’s a theme that captures the storied career of Seattle based
musician,
Since his arrival as a solo artist in 1993, with his self-titled debut on Capricorn
Records, Moore’s journey has been one of perpetual forward motion and
constant change. The record included the hits, “Satisfied” and “Blue Sky”, and
even featured the track, “Harlem”, in which he made a video with rap icon,
Ice Cube. Coming out of Austin, Texas, growing up sharing the stage with the
likes of Joe Ely, Willie Nelson, Albert King, Doug Sahm, Townes Van Zandt,
Stevie Ray Vaughan, Charlie Sexton, and Doyle Bramhall II, his first three
major label efforts placed him in the blues rock lane that over time and that
label didn’t sit entirely well with an artist with such vast influences and
creative ideas. Internally,...
Show the rest
“I will carry on ...”
This may be a single off of the soon-to-be-released EP, "Strange Days", but
it’s a theme that captures the storied career of Seattle based
musician,
Since his arrival as a solo artist in 1993, with his self-titled debut on Capricorn
Records, Moore’s journey has been one of perpetual forward motion and
constant change. The record included the hits, “Satisfied” and “Blue Sky”, and
even featured the track, “Harlem”, in which he made a video with rap icon,
Ice Cube. Coming out of Austin, Texas, growing up sharing the stage with the
likes of Joe Ely, Willie Nelson, Albert King, Doug Sahm, Townes Van Zandt,
Stevie Ray Vaughan, Charlie Sexton, and Doyle Bramhall II, his first three
major label efforts placed him in the blues rock lane that over time and that
label didn’t sit entirely well with an artist with such vast influences and
creative ideas. Internally, Austin was open-minded and filled with big ideas,
but outside of town people had a monochromatic view, and all musical roads
led to Stevie Ray Vaughan at that point in time.
“Charlie, Doyle, and I were all tossed into the next Stevie Ray mixer, and it
blunted some unique voices that were developing. My band and I were trying
to take the blues rock and soul that was part of our sound and mix it with
psychedelic music, gothic imagery, power pop,"mind soul" (Stevie Wonder's
mid-70's stuff), and even psychedelic funk (Funkadelic; Sly Stone).
Unfortunately there was no infrastructure in place for what we were doing.
There was no underground scene for rootsier music this like there was a few
years later when bands like Gomez started to break. We were way too weird
for mainstream culture and didn't have the right uniform for the unfolding
indie culture that was championing more Anglicized bands like Pavement and
MBV.” - Ian Moore
Moore recorded his second record with Mark Howard (Daniel Lanois’ engineer)
and had Daniel was around for much of the making of the record. David
Hickey of Art in America declared it one of the great art moments of '96.
“I don't consider Modernday Folklore to be a great record, but i do consider it
to be really ambitious and ahead of its time. If you really give it a close listen
you can see the breadth of what we were trying to do. We got a lot of flak
from the record label and took a lot of heat from fans and music industry
folks that thought we were losing our way.” - Ian Moore
“I’m sorry if I sound like my life’s unfair; sometimes I find it hard
just to persevere …”
Moore supported The Rolling Stones on the Steel Wheels tour of North
America, played two tours with Bob Dylan, and a tour with ZZ Top.
“I feel like the period around this record was the strongest musically for my
first band, but the pressure of all the negativity around the release
precipitated the breakup of the 'Ian Moore Band' and really made me double
down on my effort to continue to refine what I wanted to say. I realized that I
needed to make a really big statement of purpose at that point, and that led
to putting down the electric guitar for a number of years and doing an
extreme about face, leading to a very song oriented, psychedelic folk phase
that garnered a new fan base. I like to think that while I was walking through
the wilderness I was also doing a lot of homework, diving deeply into the
catalogs of Harry Nilsson, Big Star, Emitt Rhodes, etc., while also falling in
love with a lot of interesting contemporary underground rock. I lost track of
what all the guitar players were doing, and lived in a world that was all songs
and creative production.” - Ian Moore
“I will carry on ...”
It was in 2000 that Moore picked up his old friend, that electric guitar once
again, and embraced psychedelic rock and roll. This journey evolved through
the years to the forming of Ian Moore & The Lossy Coils, and even time
playing in Roky Erickson’s band and supporting Paul Weller.
Moore states, “The lineage of modern pop culture is rich and long, and people
that speak in terms of 'vintage' and 'contemporary' are myopic in view. There
is a vast array of culture to pick from, much like thrift stores, pre-EBay. You
can basically find the things that turn you on and go from there.”
Some things that turn Moore on:
Flannery O’Conner, Spiritualized, Vietnamese food, Dylan, Rivers, Social
trends, the hope and ambition of the late 60's, Faulkner, cookbooks, hiking,
B-movie magazines, Neutral Milk Hotel, long-term friendships, the architecture
of ideas, psychedelic soul, Borges, city planning, every wave of British Rock,
underdogs, Joyce, Texas, tacos, Nick Fucking Lowe!, compassion, Big Sur,
connection, vintage guitars, Peter Sellers, Aaron Neville, great old record
labels, anachronisms, wordplay, Maxfield Parrish, outmoded electronics,
Mohammed Ali, Murakami, my family, Jimi!!!, Sly!!!, Curtis!!!, Stevie!!!,
seasons, ambition, late nights
Hide the rest